Halsey Minor, who co-founded CNET, has filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy. Minor was a mega-millionaire who once was pegged by Fortune magazine, back in 1999, as having a net worth of $350 million. Now his net worth could be negative $90 million, according to a Wall Street Journal blog post. He even owes money to his former executive assistant.

CNET was sold to CBS in 2008 for $1.8 Billion, although Minor had left years earlier before the DotCom bust of 2000. Minor, who is a relative of Admiral Halsey, also was a tech investor who picked some winners. One was acquired by Google and became Google Voice. Minor was also an investor in Salesforce.com.

CNET, Salesforce, Google Voice — clearly the man is a tech genius who knows how to identify tech’s next big thing. He made a fortune by the time he was in his thirties. So what went wrong?

He bought expensive real estate. Case in point: a house in posh Bel Air that he bought for $20 million and put back on the market a year later for $12.9 million.

Then there was the house in Presidio Heights, San Francisco, that he bought for another $22 million — and claims to have put in another $15 million in improvements. There was other real estate, too, including the Landmark Hotel, Charlottesville, Virginia, that he was developing for $31 million — among other properties.

Let’s not forget the race horse. He paid $3 million for a Kentucky Derby contender that went lame before the big race.

And then there was the expensive artwork. He bought millions of dollars of artwork at Sotheby’s auction house, and then was sued for not paying for it. One of the paintings in question was Peaceable Kingdom (pictured above), by artist Edward Hicks. Minor ended up in litigation, lost and paid $6.6. million to Sotheby’s.

And now he’s bankrupt.

I don’t write about Minor to gloat about someone else’s misfortune. On the contrary, “there but for the grace of God go I” is more of my sentiment in such situations.

But it does suggest two points for entrepreneurs to take away from this saga of “tech millionaire goes bankrupt:”

You can be a genius in one area and be a huge success — but get out of your element and it could be a completely different story. When it comes to diversifying, walk carefully. On the one hand, diversifying can reduce risks inherent in over-relying on a single area. But get too far afield from what you know best in your business, and it increases different kinds of risks.

Financial independence is not so much about how much you make — it’s about how you spend it. Even multimillionaires can spend it all foolishly. Cost control in business, in government and in your personal finances is important. Don’t be the one who goes bankrupt.

Halsey Minor, who co-founded CNET, has filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy. Minor was a mega-millionaire who once was pegged by Fortune magazine, back in 1999, as having a net worth of $350 million. Now his net worth could be negative $90 million, according to a Wall Street Journal blog post. He even owes money to his former executive assistant.

CNET was sold to CBS in 2008 for $1.8 Billion, although he had left years earlier before the DotCom bust of 2000. Minor, is a descendant on his mother’s side to Admiral Halsey, also was a tech investor who picked some winners. One was acquired by Google and became Google Voice. Minor was also an investor in Salesforce.com.

CNET, Salesforce, Google Voice — clearly the man is a tech genius who knows how to identify tech’s next big thing. He made a fortune by the time he was in his thirties. So what went wrong?

He bought expensive real estate. Case in point: A house in posh Bel Air that he bought for $20 million and put back on the market a year later for $12.9 million.

Then there was the house in Presidio Heights, San Francisco, that he bought for another $22 million — and claims to have put in another $15 million in improvements. There was other real estate, too, including the Landmark Hotel, Charlottesville, Virginia, that he was developing for $31 million — among other properties.

Let’s not forget the race horse. He paid $3 million for a Kentucky Derby contender that went lame before the big race.

And then there was the expensive artwork. He bought millions of dollars of artwork at Sotheby’s auction house, and then was sued for not paying for it. One of the paintings in question was Peaceable Kingdom (pictured above), by artist Edward Hicks. Minor ended up in litigation, lost and paid $6.6. million to Sotheby’s.

And now he’s bankrupt.

I don’t write about Minor to gloat about someone else’s misfortune. On the contrary, “there but for the grace of God go I” is more of my sentiment in such situations.

But it does suggest two points for entrepreneurs to take away from this sage of “tech millionaire goes bankrupt:”

You can be a genius in one area and be a huge success — but get out of your element and it could be a completely different story. When it comes to diversifying, walk carefully. On the one hand, diversifying can reduce risks inherent in over-relying on a single area. But get too far afield from what you know best in your business, and it increases different kinds of risks.

Financial independence is not so much about how much you make — it’s about how you spend it. Even multimillionaires can spend it all foolishly. Cost control in business, in government and in your personal finances is important. Don’t be the one who goes bankrupt.

Colleagues of the former socialist MEP, as cited by the Focus news agency, remind him, that the civilized world “pays respects and tribute to the victims of the totalitarian regimes, not to the officers of the secret police who participated in these repressions directly or indirectly.”

“The efforts to reinstate diplomats, agents of the former State Security are not a good signal for Bulgaria,” German EPP MEPs Michael Galer and Elmar Brok say in a statement.

“To our great disappointment we learned that our former colleague, Kristian Vigenin – a representative of the young generation of Bulgarian politicians whom we worked with at the European Parliament Committee on Civil Liberties, Justice and Home Affairs – immediately after his appointment as Bulgaria’s new Foreign Minister declared that the reinstatement of former collaborators or full-time employees of the former State Security, who had until recently held senior positions at Bulgaria’s diplomatic service, would be a main priority,” the MEPS state, condemning as “totally inappropriate” Vigenin’s claims that these people had endured repressions and humiliation and their potential was not to be wasted.

“In 2000, the Bulgarian Parliament adopted a Law on Declaring the Criminal Nature of the Communist Regime in Bulgaria.Over the past four years, Bulgaria made some important steps towards understanding its communist past, including by granting all citizens access to the archives of the repressive institutions of the communist power and by subscribing to the initiative to mark August 23 as the Day of Remembrance for Victims of Stalinism and Nazism and other totalitarian regimes. We believe these accomplishments should not be questioned, but should be preserved, encouraged and deepened with a view to overcoming the traumas of totalitarianism,” the MEPs conclude.